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Rhode Island Democrats Pick their Attorney General Candidate

From turnto10.com:

State Rep. Peter Kilmartin won the Democratic primary for attorney general.

The 48-year-old Kilmartin, a Pawtucket native, defeated Smithfield Councilman Steve Archambault and former Providence city solicitor Joe Fernandez in Tuesday’s voting.

Kilmartin will face Republican Erik Wallin and Moderate Chris Little on Nov. 2.

Kilmartin served nearly 24 years as a Pawtucket police officer and has been in the General Assembly for 20 years. He earned his law degree from Roger Williams University.

He has said he wants to focus on preventing youth crime and fighting gang violence by doing more work in neighborhoods.

Read the Rest…

Iowa Republican Attorney General Candidate Vows to “Clean up the Mess”

From the Quad City Times:

Brenna Findley worked four jobs to pay for college and the one she’ll draw most heavily on if elected Iowa attorney general will be housecleaning.

She’ll draws on the skills she learned cleaning houses to “clean up the mess in Des Moines,” Findley told the Five Season Republican Women on Tuesday in Cedar Rapids. She cited criticism of Gov. Chet Culver’s administration for problems in the Department of Economic Development’s film office, the Alcoholic Beverages Division and allegations of “pay-to-play” contributions from casino interests.

“We need to air things out and let the sun shine in,” she said.

Findley, a Dexter lawyer, also criticized her opponent, 28-year Democratic Attorney General Tom Miller, for accepting a political contribution from an Iowa family implicated in a national voluntary recall of more than half a billion eggs. Miller accepted a donation in 2005 from Peter DeCoster just five years after Miller’s office labeled his father, Jack DeCoster, Iowa’s first “habitual violator” of state environmental laws.

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New Ad: Alabama AG Candidate Luther Strange “Working Class Roots”

New Poll Shows Republican Mike DeWine leading AG Race

From SurveyUSA:

Former US Senator Republican Mike DeWine today edges incumbent Attorney General Democrat Richard Cordray, 47% to 40%. Men account for DeWine’s entire advantage. Democrats are twice as likely to vote for DeWine as Republicans are to vote for Cordray. Cordray, first elected in 2008, is seeking his first full term in office.

Read the rest and check out the poll…

Arizona AG Candidates trade jabs

From East Valley Tribune:

The two candidates who want to become the state’s top lawyer traded jabs Tuesday over who has more experience.

Republican Tom Horne launched the attack by charging that Felecia Rotellini “has never tried a case in her entire life.” He said the Democratic contender for state attorney general is misleading voters by claiming to be an experienced trial attorney.

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Table is set in NY AG Race

From the New York Post:

State Sen. Eric Schneiderman (D-Manhattan) defeated Nassau County District Attorney Kathleen Rice last night for the Democratic nomination for attorney general.

With 94 percent of the vote counted, the veteran lawmaker led Rice 34-31 percent in the party’s five-way contest to succeed gubernatorial hopeful Andrew Cuomo.

Prosecutor-turned-trial lawyer Sean Coffey ranked third, while Assemblyman Richard Brodsky (D-Westchester) and former Insurance Superintendent Eric Dinallo brought up the rear.

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MO House Speaker Says State Should Spend Federal Money

From KansasCity.com:

Missouri House Speaker Ron Richard says the state should spend — not save — a $200 million influx from the federal government.

The Republican speaker said Monday he wants to highlight the legislature’s role in spending decisions by overriding Gov. Jay Nixon’s veto of a bill creating a special fund for the money.

Richard said he thought the House hasn’t been included in discussions about using the money.

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RSLC REDMAP Rundown – September 14th, 2010

REDMAP

Welcome to this week’s edition of REDMAP Rundown, a synopsis of redistricting news brought to you by the RSLC’s REDistricting MAjority Project (REDMAP).  This weekly update gives you the latest on what those in the Beltway, and across the country, are saying about the impending reapportionment and redistricting process.

In this week’s big edition of the Rundown: Independent analysts suggest surge could be even bigger than GOP claims, How this affects ’12, Sabato says “most significant Democratic disasters” will be on state level, Fixed, Triage time, The turnout gap, The gift that keeps on giving the whole decade, Ohio “swingiest of the swing states” and Indian has bad news for Dems …

Michael Cooper at the New York Times writes, “The midterm elections are being closely watched to determine whether Republicans will have a majority in Congress for the next two years. But it is the outcome of a lower-profile battle over state legislatures that could strengthen the Republican Party for a decade.  Republicans are within reach of gaining control of eight or more chambers in state legislatures this fall, according to interviews with Republicans, Democrats and independent political analysts. … For Democrats, the prospect of legislative losses could not come at a worse time. … Republicans are predicting that they will gain at least 10 chambers this fall, which they say would give them the power to redraw up to 25 Congressional districts.  ‘That will have a huge impact down the line,’ said Ed Gillespie, a former chairman of the Republican Party who now runs [the RSLC].  ‘Not just on taxes, schools and roads and the important business of state government, but also in terms of representation for a decade in Congress.’ Some independent analysts suggest that the Republican surge could be even greater.”

Jumping past this year’s surge, Hotline On Call reports, “There has been — and will be — plenty of discussion whether Democrats can hold on to the House and the Senate this year and what that will mean for Pres. Obama’s re-election prospects in ’12. But for a better indication of how Obama ’12 chances, it is worth watching the most competitive state legislature races this fall. … ‘[Democrats] will be very lucky if they hang on to a single chamber that they [say lie squarely in Obama’s re-election roadmap],” said Chris Jankowski, the Executive Director of the GOP’s “REDMAP” redistricting program. … ‘We can confidently say that Republicans are not going to lose a single chamber,’ Jankowski said.  Jankowski added that Republicans are in position to go after Obama’s base.  ‘Every district we’ll play in was won by Obama,’ he said.  That, Jankowski said, will pose problems for Obama in ’12 … The RSLC will focus on providing grassroots, field and messaging support. If the election breaks the GOP’s way, these races will present an uphill climb for Obama.  ‘When you couple that with the wave of new Republican governors, then you’ll have a very solid Republican field team in states that are going to be swing states — they have to contested by both presidential candidates,’ Jankowski said. ‘For Obama, they will be his path to re-election.’”

“Will President Obama’s midterm campaign push help the Democrats?” The Washington Post to UVA’s political prognosticator Larry Sabato who thinks, “Presidents like to believe that their work can tame the seas. But when fierce political winds build a towering wave, even a presidential-size yacht can be capsized. … The most significant Democratic disasters will likely come at the state level. On the eve of redistricting, Republicans will gain perhaps eight governorships, 400 to 500 state legislators and eight to 14 new state legislative chambers.”

The Fix’s Aaron Blake takes a look at “The top eight redistricting battles of 2010.”

“Triage Time For Democrats: There is no shortage of bad news for Democrats these days,” says Charlie Cook.  “One expert on state legislative races privately put the over/under at 500 seats nationwide. In other words, Republicans are equally likely to gain more than 500 seats as they are to gain fewer. The GOP will probably also win control of many statehouse chambers, which will have an obvious impact on congressional and state legislative redistricting next year. That’s a big deal.”

“When you start to look at it state by state, if there’s a big Republican wave election in November, the advantage for the Republicans in the redistricting would be fairly dramatic,” the National Conference of State Legislatures’ Tim Storey tells NPR.  “‘They could find that they have almost unilateral authority to draw about 160 U.S. House seats.’  That Republican wave is looking more and more likely. A recent study by Curtis Gans, the director of the Center for the Study of the American Electorate at American University, shows that Republicans are already showing up to the polls in greater numbers than ever before. ‘The turnout gap is 4 million people,’ Gans tells Raz. ‘It is the first time since 1930 that Republican turnout has exceeded Democratic.’ While Republican voters are turning out in historically high numbers, Democrats are hitting historic lows. … This lack of enthusiasm could have a lasting effect on congressional politics for a decade to come.”

The Los Angeles Times reports, “Generally speaking, strategists say, campaign budgets will double in targeted races compared with non-redistricting years. ‘Whoever has the pen in hand has the opportunity,’ said Thomas M. Reynolds, a former congressman and vice chairman of the [RSLC]. ‘It is a gift that will keep on giving,’ Ed Gillespie, head of the RSLC, told a Washington gathering of potential donors. He suggested that $1 spent today on drawing a safe congressional seat would save many times the cost of winning a competitive race later. ‘This is one of the best investments you can make.’”

Agence France-Presse has a brief primer on redistricting for our worldwide friends.  “President Barack Obama’s Democratic allies and Republican foes are battling over a once-in-a-decade prize in November mid-term elections: power to literally redraw the US political map. … The November 2 elections will decide which party controls key state legislatures and governorships that typically carry out the task of redrawing a state’s congressional districts … ‘The redistricting process has a large impact on whether or not any given seat is contestable,’ said Justin Buchler, an expert on redistricting who teaches political science at Case Western Reserve University in Ohio.”

Speaking of the Buckeye State, PoliticsDaily.com labels it the “swingiest of swing states” saying, “right now, the advantage that Democrats won in 2008 with Barack Obama’s victory and the pickup of U.S. and state House seats is seriously threatened.  Republicans also seem poised to take back the state House and hold onto their majority in the state Senate. If they control the governorship and both houses of the state Legislature as well as a majority of congressional seats, it would have a major impact on the redistricting of the state following this year’s census, when Ohio is expected to lose two U.S. House seats. And that could have a spillover effect in 2012.”

And in Indiana, Hoosier political godfather, Jack Colwell, writes, “Republicans almost certainly will do all the redistricting in Indiana. For congressional districts. For the Indiana House. For the Indiana Senate.  And that’s bad news for Democrats for a decade.  In most states, including Indiana, state legislatures do the redrawing of districts every 10 years.  While there are close battles in some states, as Democrats try to keep Republicans from taking control of more state legislative chambers amidst a Republican tide, the battle already is over in Indiana at least for drawing congressional and Indiana Senate districts and, unless there is a monumental political turnaround, for the Indiana House as well.  This November, with that expected Republican tide in a Republican-leaning state and with the governor deeply involved in recruiting and funding GOP candidates, it is highly unlikely that Democrats can retain a House majority. Republicans then could draw the House districts and negate any need for a commission for congressional districts by joining with Senate Republicans in that remap. Result: Bad news for Democrats, not just on Nov. 2, but for a decade.”

The RSLC is the only national organization whose mission is to elect down ballot state-level Republican office-holders. To sign up for the REDMAP Rundown, or for more information or media inquiries, please contact Adam Temple at 571.480.4891.

NY: Down to the Wire in Democrat AG Primary

From PortWashingtonPatch:

Democratic state attorney general candidate Kathleen Rice remains confident of victory as the nail biter close election enters its final hours.

Campaigning at the Long Island Railroad entrance to Penn Station Monday evening, a scant 12 hours before polls open, Rice, the two term Nassau County district attorney, stressed many of her key campaign points during an interview with Patch. Rice continued to hammer her qualifications for the state’s top legal post, stressing her work as DA, along with her work as a federal prosecutor and with the Brooklyn district attorney’s office.

“I am the only person in the race who has run a law enforcement agency,” Rice said. “I am the only candidate who has run a large law firm.”

Read the Rest…

CO: AG and Challenger Clash in Debate

From the Colorado Statesman:

The two candidates vying for the attorney general post on the November ballot squared off again this week, this time on a debate that was televised Friday evening.

Democrat Stan Garnett and incumbent Republican John Suthers continue to spar over Suthers’ participation in a lawsuit against the federal government over health care reform. Tuesday’s debate also covered medical marijuana, ballot initiatives, and how to cut the budget of the AG’s office next year.

The debate was taped Tuesday afternoon at the studios of CPT-12 (formerly KBDI), in conjunction with KCNC-TV4. It aired on CPT-12 on Friday at 9:30 p.m. as part of the “Colorado Decides” series, leading up to the November election.

Suthers defended his decision to join in a lawsuit filed last March against the federal government by a dozen other attorneys general. The lawsuit seeks to block implementation of health care reform; specifically, portions of the law that require individuals to purchase health insurance. The lawsuit also challenges the constitutionality of the penalties that would be assessed to those who disregard the law but do not qualify for exemptions because of income or other allowable reasons.

Read the Rest…


 

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